Gold Bugs Ignore Price Slump, Snap Up US Mint Coins

Sales of gold coins more than doubled in September as futures fell the most since June 2013.

Last month, sales rose to 58,000 ounces, the highest since January, data from the mint’s website showed Tuesday. That compared with 25,000 ounces in August and 13,000 ounces a year earlier. In September, gold prices on the Comex in New York fell 5.9 percent to $1,211.60 an ounce, trimming this year’s advance to 0.8 percent.

“Due to the price drop, it’s a great opportunity for the individual investor to jump into the gold market,” Scott Carter, the chief executive officer of Los Angeles-based Lear Capital, said in a telephone interview. “There’s a strong argument for having physical assets” as a haven, partly because of Europe’s struggling economy, he said.

Gold moved closer to erasing gains this year after climbing as much as 16 percent in March. Yesterday, the price touched $1,204.30, the lowest since Jan. 2, on bets that U.S. interest rates will increase, boosting the dollar and eroding the appeal of the metal as a hedge against inflation.

In the third quarter, gold fell 8.4 percent after a 10 percent rally in the first half topped gains for equities and Treasurys. Last week, holdings in global exchange-traded products backed by the metal dropped to the lowest in five years.

Goldman Outlook

Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s Jeffrey Currie said last week in an interview that gold risks are “significantly skewed to the downside” as political concerns eased in Ukraine and the Middle East.